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・ Coast Gymkhana Club Ground
・ Coast Highway
・ Coast Highway (California)
・ Coast Highway (NCTD station)
・ Coast horned lizard
・ Coast Hotels
・ Coast II Coast
・ Coast Indian Reservation
・ Coast Lake
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・ Coast Line (Denmark)
・ Coast Line (UP)
・ Coast Lines
・ Coast Meridian Overpass
・ Coast Miwok language
Coast Miwok people
・ Coast Miwok traditional narratives
・ Coast mole
・ Coast Mountain Bus Company
・ Coast Mountains
・ Coast of Bays—Central—Notre Dame
・ Coast of High Barbaree
・ Coast of Ireland Station
・ Coast of Poets
・ Coast of Skeletons
・ Coast of Slaves
・ Coast of the Gods
・ Coast Open
・ Coast Peoples' Party
・ Coast phase


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Coast Miwok people : ウィキペディア英語版
Coast Miwok people

The Coast Miwok are an indigenous people that was the second largest group of Miwok people. The Coast Miwok inhabited the general area of modern Marin County and southern Sonoma County in Northern California, from the Golden Gate north to Duncans Point and eastward to Sonoma Creek. The Coast Miwok included the Bodega Bay Miwok from authenticated Miwok villages around Bodega Bay and Marin Miwok.
==Culture==

The Coast Miwok spoke their own Coast Miwok language in the Utian linguistic group. They lived by hunting and gathering, and lived in small bands without centralized political authority. In the springtime they would head to the coasts to hunt salmon and other seafood, including seaweed.〔Lightfoot and Parrish 216〕 Otherwise their staple foods were primarily acorns—particularly from black and tan oak–nuts and wild game, such as deer and cottontail rabbits and black-tailed deer, ''Odocoileus hemionus columbianus'', a coastal subspecies of the California mule deer, ''Odocoileus hemionus''.〔Lightfoot and Parrish 247, 335〕 When hunting deer, Miwok hunters traditionally used Brewer's angelica, ''Angelica breweri'' to eliminate their own scent.〔Lightfoot and Parrish 335〕 Miwok did not typically hunt bears.〔Lightfoot and Parrish 334〕 Yerba buena leaf tea were used medicinally.〔Lightfoot and Parrish 219, 223〕
Tattooing was a traditional practice among Coast Miwok, and they burned poison-oak for a pigment.〔Lightfoot and Parrish 229〕 Their traditional houses were constructed with slabs of tule grass or redwood bark in a cone-shaped form.〔Lightfoot and Parrish 225〕
Miwok people are skilled at basketry. A recreated Coast Miwok village called Kule Loklo is located at the Point Reyes National Seashore.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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